Kansas Provides Compelling Evidence of Failure of ‘Supply-Side’ Tax Cuts
The deep income cuts that
In 2012 and 2013, at the urging of Governor
*
* Likewise, the number of
Moreover,
Some conservative analysts and organizations now claim the experiment was contaminated by the state's failure to reduce spending, coincidental declines in some major
* State spending was sharply constrained, falling between the 2012 and 2016 budget years by 5.5 percent on a per-person basis, after adjusting for inflation. Moreover, had the state cut spending more deeply, job creation and economic growth would have slowed even more. To forestall deeper spending cuts,
*
* Under supply-side theory, regardless of whether the exemption led to widespread tax avoidance, it should also have prompted the formation of many new
The dismal results of the 2012-17
Kansas Tax Cuts Among Deepest State Tax Cuts Ever Enacted
Brownback released his tax plan in January 2012.(3) Its key proposals were cutting the three income tax brackets to two, reducing the top rate from 6.45 percent to 4.9 percent, and eliminating taxation of profits from sole proprietorships, farms, partnerships, Subchapter S corporations, and limited liability companies (LLCs). These are types of "pass-through" businesses -- that is, firms whose profits are not taxed at the business level but instead passed through to the owners and taxed at the owners' personal income tax rates.(4)
Brownback claimed that the package was "close to revenue neutral" because it included several revenue-raising offsets: eliminating all itemized deductions (for example, mortgage interest and charitable contributions), repealing most tax credits (including the earned income tax credit for low-income workers), raising severance taxes on some oil and gas producers, and cancelling a previously scheduled reduction in the sales tax rate from 6.3 percent to 5.7 percent.(5) Finally, Brownback proposed automatically dedicating all future revenue growth over 2 percent annually to additional cuts in personal and corporate income taxes until both were eliminated. This proposal became known as the "march to zero."
Lawmakers enacted all of the proposed tax cuts in Brownback's package but did not repeal itemized deductions or the earned income credit or suspend the scheduled sales tax reduction. As a result, the legislation was scored as losing
Once again, the legislature gave Brownback most, but not all, of what he requested. The final 2013 legislation instituted a three-step cut in the top income tax rate to 3.9 percent in 2018 (rather than 3.5 percent in 2017, as Brownback had proposed) and restored the sales tax rate to 6.15 percent rather than the 6.3 percent Brownback had sought. The bill also trimmed both itemized and standard deductions and included the more aggressive "march to zero" automatic income tax rate cuts Brownback had proposed in 2012, based on 2 percent revenue growth. On net, the 2013 legislation recouped just
In sum, the 2012 and 2013 bills together cut
On
Proponents Predicted Tax Cuts Would Boost Kansas Economy
In offering the 2012 tax cut package,
* "Lower income tax rates allow
* "Thanks to the innovative approach of eliminating individual state income tax on non-wage business income (e.g., from LLCs and S-corps), approximately 191,000
In other words, Brownback argued that the tax cuts would make it possible for
Two additional points are worth noting. First, Brownback emphasized that the package was intended to be revenue neutral; he did not claim that
Shortly after Brownback issued his proposal,
* People do not work, invest, or engage in entrepreneurial activities in order to pay taxes. They engage in such economic activities in order to earn after-tax income. When the government increases its share of the income earned by its citizens, the incentive to engage in growth-enhancing economic activities falls; alternatively, the disincentive to these activities rises. The higher the tax on the next dollar earned (the marginal tax rate), the larger the disincentive.
* By lowering the income tax rate . . .
* Work effort
* Work demand (and subsequently wages)
* Savings
* Investment and, subsequently, greater capital accumulation.(12)
Laffer also argued that state tax cuts spur economic growth by attracting workers and job-creating businesses from other states with higher taxes.(13)
In sum,
Tax Cuts Failed to Boost Kansas Economy
In reality, the
See chart here (https://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/kansas-provides-compelling-evidence-of-failure-of-supply-side-tax-cuts).
Private-sector job creation.(15) As Figure 1 shows,
See chart here (https://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/kansas-provides-compelling-evidence-of-failure-of-supply-side-tax-cuts).
Economic output (inflation-adjusted gross domestic product). As Figure 2 shows, between the fourth quarter of 2012 (the quarter immediately before the tax cuts took effect) and the second quarter of 2017 (the quarter ending at the end of
Labor force participation. Under supply-side theory,
See chart here (https://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/kansas-provides-compelling-evidence-of-failure-of-supply-side-tax-cuts).
New pass-through businesses. Although this fact has received almost no attention, the
See chart here (https://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/kansas-provides-compelling-evidence-of-failure-of-supply-side-tax-cuts).
* New business owners. As Figure 4 shows, the number of taxpayers reporting income from sole proprietorships (a form of pass-through business that always has a single owner) on their federal income tax returns rose more quickly in
In sum, there is overwhelming empirical evidence that
Three Sophisticated Studies Find No Evidence That Tax Cuts Helped Kansas Economy
Three different groups of economists have conducted research using sophisticated statistical techniques to isolate the effects of the
* Economists from the
* With regard to sole proprietorships, the researchers found a small "2 percent increase in the probability of reporting self-employment income in the two years after the reform (2013 and 2014)." However, "essentially none" of those new sole proprietorships reported significant deductions for employee wages or new capital equipment, and some of them received income from businesses of which they had previously been employees. The authors concluded that "those who (were) induced to self-employment were likely individuals recharacterizing (preexisting wage) income for the lower tax rate rather than generating new business activity."
*
* Our central results are that the key component of the tax law change intended to spur economic growth, the exemption of business income from personal income taxation, has not had a positive effect on private-sector employment in
*
* (R)ather than experiencing stimulative growth effects from reductions in taxes, if anything,
Explanations for Tax Cuts' Failure to Generate Growth Are Invalid
Anti-tax advocates lauded Brownback's experiment while it was underway, but several now claim that it was tainted and offers no lessons about the validity of state-level supply-side economics:
* Before the tax cuts took effect,
* In
* In 2015, long after
* The
The preceding quotes allude to the principal arguments that anti-tax organizations have offered as to why the tax cuts' failure to generate meaningful economic growth does not undermine the validity of supply-side economics: (1)
None of these arguments are valid.
State Spending Was Sharply Constrained After Tax Cuts
The first major explanation from some conservatives for the Brownback tax cuts' failure to stimulate meaningful economic growth is that lawmakers did not follow through with spending cuts. ALEC Vice President
Such claims do not withstand scrutiny:
* In pushing for his tax plan, Brownback did not claim that
See table here (https://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/kansas-provides-compelling-evidence-of-failure-of-supply-side-tax-cuts).
* State government spending was, in fact, tightly constrained following the tax cuts. As Table 1 shows, total General Fund spending rose only 0.3 percent in nominal terms between fiscal years 2012 (the last fiscal year not affected by the tax cuts) and 2016 (the most recent year for which final spending data are available). After adjusting for inflation and population growth, General Fund spending per resident fell 5.5 percent over those four years. The number of state employees fell by 4 percent in the same period.(37) Nine separate times during the period the tax cuts were in effect,
* Had Kansas cut spending more deeply, its economic and job growth would have been even more anemic. Enacting deeper spending cuts at the outset might have enabled
* The state avoided deeper program cuts by draining its financial reserves and delaying deposits into its employee pension fund. The state General Fund balance fell from
In short, those who claim that the tax cuts failed to generate economic growth because
Downturns in Agriculture, Energy, and Airplane Manufacturing Not Major Factors
Defenders of the tax cuts have also argued that larger economic forces overwhelmed the positive effects of the tax cuts. Brownback said in 2016, "So your three primary legs of the
None of these excuses is valid.
* Aircraft manufacturing is too small a component of the
* Between
* In short,
See chart here (https://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/kansas-provides-compelling-evidence-of-failure-of-supply-side-tax-cuts).
* Energy production is too small a component of the
* Farm earnings fell less in
In short, declines in employment and earnings in
Even if declines in a few specific industries important to
Rather than constantly tinker with their tax systems in search of a magic economic development bullet, state policymakers should focus on designing and implementing cost-effective, targeted policies to stimulate entrepreneurship,(49) assist their important in-state industries,(50) and diversify their state economic base. Their top priority must be ensuring that the state fulfills its fundamental responsibilities to provide an excellent education system, modern and efficient roads, bridges, and other critical infrastructure, and a high quality of life with safe communities and attractive parks and recreation opportunities. This will make their states places where people want to live and businesses want to start up and expand.
Tax Avoidance Does Not Explain Supply-Side Failures
The exemption of pass-through profits from the
* Owners of existing S corporations, who are required by federal law to draw a taxable salary from their businesses, could (within limits) reduce those salaries and take more of their income in the form of tax-exempt dividends paid out of their companies' profits. Similarly, if the spouse of the owner of any type of pass-through business was an employee of the same business, the spouse could reduce his taxable salary and the other spouse could draw larger dividends to offset this reduction.
* Employees of all types of organizations could resign their positions and go out on their own as self-employed (sole proprietor) contractors to their former employers, thereby exempting all their contractor income from
* In a variation of the second strategy -- one that
* So-called "C corporations," which are subject to the
However, currently available evidence suggests that taxpayers adopted these strategies only to a modest extent.
* The most widely cited evidence in support of widespread tax avoidance was erroneous. When the pass-through exemption was enacted, the Brownback administration claimed that roughly 191,000 pass-through business owners were potential beneficiaries. Thus, when The
* In reality, the original 191,000 estimate was erroneous.(56) It represented the number of
* In short, the
* Two sophisticated statistical studies also found no evidence that the tax cuts significantly increased the number of pass-through businesses, meaning there were little if any "real" supply-side effects or artificial tax avoidance effects. As discussed above, three statistical analyses of the effects of the
* We observe neither an increase in the number of jobs at (private) establishments nor an increase in the number of (sole) proprietors in
* One of the other studies found a 2 percent increase in the probability of reporting self-employment income in the two years after the exemption took effect(61) but concluded that the increase probably represented "individuals recharacterizing (preexisting wage) income for the lower tax rate rather than generating new business activity" -- that is, tax avoidance rather than actual business creation. And the study found no evidence that the tax cuts had stimulated the creation of S corporations and partnerships, meaning there was neither a "real" supply-side effect nor an artificial tax avoidance effect.(62)
* The
* The Department also reported that the number of C corporations converting to S corporations -- the fourth possible tax avoidance strategy listed above -- jumped from an average of 347 per year in 2010, 2011, and 2012 to 575 in 2013 before falling to 369 in 2014. While the 2013 increase was large in percentage terms, it was small relative to the 27,532 C corporations operating in the state in 2013, and was a one-time occurrence.(64) Again, the Department concluded that "the number of C-Corporations that have switched to a pass-through entity after the tax policy was implemented in 2013 is consistent with the percentage switching prior to the tax policy."
But regardless of whether the exemption led to widespread tax avoidance, under supply-side theory it should also have prompted the formation of many new
Conclusion
The 2012-17
A single experiment rarely proves or disproves a scientific hypothesis, and by itself the
Footnotes:
(1)
(2) This claim has been thoroughly debunked. See, for example,
(3) "The Brownback Pro-Growth Plan: Making the State Income Tax Flatter, Fairer, and Simpler,"
(4) Pass-through income is taxable in the year in which it is earned even if it is not distributed to the owner. In other words, the income is "passed through" to the owner for tax purposes, but it may or may not be "passed through" in the form of cash.
(5) Brownback also proposed to double the standard deduction for heads of households to mitigate the increase in their tax liability resulting from his proposal to repeal the state earned income tax credit.
(6) Supplemental Note on Senate Substitute for House Bill 2117; http://kslegislature.org/li_2012/b2011_12/measures/documents/summary_hb_2117_2012.pdf.
(7) See the Fiscal Note on Senate Bill 78 as introduced, http://kslegislature.org/li_2014/b2013_14/measures/documents/fisc_note_sb78_00_0000.pdf.
(8) Supplemental Note on House Bill 2059; http://kslegislature.org/li_2014/b2013_14/measures/documents/summary_hb_2059_2013.pdf.
(9)
(10) "The Brownback Pro-Growth Plan."
(11) This argument is not valid in the case of tax cuts for wage, salary, and passive investment income. Because states must balance their budgets, every dollar of such a tax cut must be offset by either reduced state spending (which takes a dollar of disposable income from a state employee, state contractor, or recipient of a state transfer payment) or an offsetting increase in another tax (which reduces the disposable income of the person paying it). The only exception to this is if the tax cut leads to dissaving by the state government, for example, the drawing down of state reserves or the delaying of a contribution to a state pension fund.
Putting more money into a business's hands by cutting its taxes can lead it to make an in-state investment that it otherwise would not have made, assuming it lacks sufficient cash on hand to make the investment and cannot borrow the money.
(12)
(13) "A key part of the nine-state comparisons is that people and businesses move to states with pro-growth tax environments." ("Economics 101," p. 7.)
(14)
(15) For an explanation of why cutting personal income taxes for businesses should not be expected to have significant supply-side effects in the real world, see:
(16) The same is true if the comparison begins in
(17)
(18)
(19) "Governor's Consensus Revenue Estimating Working Group Final Recommendations,"
(20)
(21)
(22) "The reform had no measurable impact on the number of filers reporting income from S-corporations or partnerships."
(23)
(24) The "synthetic control methodology" used in the paper creates a comparison group of states by applying different weights to the various states' recent economic performance as well as measures that should, theoretically, contribute to that performance (such as education levels). It should be acknowledged that the authors are critical of the types of neighboring states comparisons used in the other two studies summarized here.
(25)
(26)
(27)
(28)
(29)
(30) Interview with
(31)
(32)
(33) Report Card, p. 24.
(34)
(35) Quoted in Berman, Note 31.
(36)
(37)
(38)
(39) CBPP calculations for
(40) A table the
(41)
(42)
(43) Williams and Wilterdink, Note 29, p. 14.
(44)
(45) Economist
(46)
(47) The fall from peak employment in the mining and logging sector, which occurred almost a year after the tax cuts took effect (
(48) Other reasons include the regressive distributional impact that tax cuts justified on economic development grounds often have, and the fact that tax cuts likely impair a state's ability to provide services that are critical to its long-run economic success, such as an educated and healthy work force and high-quality roads, bridges, and other infrastructure.
(49) For a discussion of the importance of entrepreneurship to state economic growth, see
(50)The Wall Street Journal recently reported that
(51)
(52)
(53)
(54)
(55) Of course, the Brownback administration itself cited the increase as providing evidence that the exemption had, in fact, stimulated the creation of new businesses. In the same
(56)
(57) The 2009 data for
(58) Non-resident owners of pass-through businesses operating in
(59) See the source cited in Note 34.
(60) See the source cited in Note 23, pp. 16-17.
(61) The fact that
(62) See Note 22.
(63) See the source cited in Note 19, p. 9.
(64) See the source cited in Note 19, pp. 10-11.
(65) See Micha



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